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Michael Barry Confesses to Doping and Issues the Following Statement

by pedalmag.com
October 10, 2012 – Canada’s Michael Barry, who recently retired and was named in the USADA’s Statement on their Reasoned Decision regarding the Lance Armstrong case where they banned six former Armstrong USPS teammates including Barry, issued the following statement regarding his involvement and confession to doping.

The USADA Investigation

Cycling has always been a part of my life. As a boy my dream was to become a professional cyclist who raced at the highest level in Europe. I achieved my goal when I first signed a contract with the United States Postal Service Cycling team in 2002. Soon after I realized reality was not what I had dreamed. Doping had become an epidemic problem in professional cycling.

Recently, I was contacted by United States Anti-Doping Agency to testify in their investigation into the use of performance enhancing drugs on the United States Postal Service Team. I agreed to participate as it allowed me to explain my experiences, which I believe will help improve the sport for today’s youth who aspire to be tomorrow’s champions.

After being encouraged by the team, pressured to perform and pushed to my physical limits I crossed a line I promised myself and others I would not: I doped. It was a decision I deeply regret. It caused me sleepless nights, took the fun out of cycling and racing, and tainted the success I achieved at the time. This was not how I wanted to live or race.

In the summer of 2006, I never doped again and became a proponent of clean cycling through my writing and interviews.

From 2006 until the end of my career in 2012, I chose to race for teams that took a strong stance against doping. Although I never confessed to my past, I wrote and spoke about the need for change.  Cycling is now a cleaner sport, many teams have adopted anti-doping policies and most importantly I know a clean rider can now win at the highest level.

I apologize to those I deceived. I will accept my suspension and any other consequences. I will work hard to regain people’s trust.

The lessons I learned through my experiences have been valuable. My goal now is to help turn the sport into a place where riders are not tempted to dope, have coaches who they can trust, race on teams that nurture talent and have doctors who are concerned for their health. From direct experience, I know there are already teams doing this but it needs to be universal throughout cycling.

Progressive change is occurring. My hope is that this case will further that evolution.





1 Comments For This Post

  1. Rumblebee, Ont, Can says:

    I hope the powers that be suspend Mike for life. No contact with anyone within the sport,seems fair especially as seeing we are trying to clean up the sport. We can’t have guys like this linger around,they just perpetuate drug use and contribute to the cycle. What does an ex doper have to offer up and coming riders in terms of experience when years of that were mired in drug use.

    If cycling wants a clean start guys like Mike have to go.
    He only came clean when it was no longer a threat to his career ambitions.
    Not a good role model for young riders.

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